Murthy magic: Analysts see bright future for Infosys

Murthy magic: Analysts see bright future for Infosys

Infosys, India's second-largest software services exporter, posted quarterly profit that missed analyst estimates on a charge related to visa use in the United States, but raised the lower end of its fiscal full-year revenue guidance.

The results were the first for a full quarter since co-founder Narayana Murthy came out of retirement on June 1 to be executive chairman after two years of mostly disappointing earnings that saw the long-time industry bellwether lose ground to rivals.

Several analysts said the company has set conservative revenue guidance that they expect it to beat.

"There's still a lot of work to be done, but they're turning around," said Bhavin Shah, CEO of Equirus Securities.

Murthy magic: Analysts see bright future for Infosys

Consolidated net profit for the three months to September 30 was Rs 2,407 crore (Rs 24.07 billion) compared with Rs 2,369 crore (Rs 23.69 billion) in the same period a year earlier, the Bangalore-based company said in a statement Friday.

Shares in Infosys, which in recent quarters have reacted violently to its results and guidance statements, rose a relatively modest 5 per cent soon after markets opened.

The result missed the Rs 2,626 crore (Rs 26.26 billion) average of analyst estimates according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S, though the earnings suffered from a Rs 219 crore (Rs 2.19 billion) provision for "visa related matters."

Infosys has been under investigation in the US, its biggest market, over the past use of temporary employment visas and the company said it had made the provision based on discussions with US government agencies and is seeking a "civil resolution" to the matter.

Murthy magic: Analysts see bright future for Infosys

Murthy, who had retired at 65 under company rules at the time, has said Infosys took its eye off its growth target to earn a bigger share of revenue from higher-margin proprietary software and consulting.

He is attempting to re-focus on large plain-vanilla IT outsourcing contracts that boost growth and have long been the industry staple.

Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services are being helped by a revival in demand from investment banks in their largest market, the US, and growing appetite for outsourcing in Europe as companies seek to reduce IT costs.

The industry, which generates most of its revenue in dollars, is also benefiting from weakness in the rupee.

Consolidated revenue for the September quarter was 129.65 billion rupees, up nearly 32 percent from a year earlier.

(Additional reporting by Aradhana Aravindan and Abhishek Vishnoi in Mumbai)

Image: Employees of Indian software company Infosys walk past Infosys logos at their campus.Photographs: Vivek Prakash/Reuters